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5 dangerous things you should let your kids do

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    Welcome to "Five Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Children Do."
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    I don't have children.
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    I borrow my friends' children, so
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    (Laughter)
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    take all this advice with a grain of salt.
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    I'm Gever Tulley.
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    I'm a contract computer scientist by trade,
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    but I'm the founder of something called the Tinkering School.
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    It's a summer program which aims to help kids to learn
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    how to build the things that they think of.
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    So we build a lot of things.
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    And I do put power tools into the hands of second-graders.
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    So if you're thinking about sending your kid to Tinkering School,
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    they do come back bruised, scraped and bloody.
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    So, you know, we live in a world
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    that's subjected to ever more stringent child safety regulations.
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    There doesn't seem to be any limit on how crazy
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    child safety regulations can get.
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    We put suffocation warnings on all the -- on every piece of plastic film
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    manufactured in the United States or for sale
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    with an item in the United States.
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    We put warnings on coffee cups to tell us
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    that the contents may be hot.
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    And we seem to think that any item
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    sharper than a golf ball is too sharp
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    for children under the age of 10.
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    So where does this trend stop?
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    When we round every corner and eliminate every sharp object,
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    every pokey bit in the world,
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    then the first time that kids come in contact with anything sharp
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    or not made out of round plastic,
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    they'll hurt themselves with it.
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    So, as the boundaries of what we determine as the safety zone
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    grow ever smaller, we cut off our children from valuable opportunities
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    to learn how to interact with the world around them.
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    And despite all of our best efforts and intentions,
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    kids are always going to figure out
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    how to do the most dangerous thing they can,
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    in whatever environment they can.
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    So despite the provocative title, this presentation is really about safety
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    and about some simple things that we can do
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    to raise our kids to be creative, confident
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    and in control of the environment around them.
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    And what I now present to you is an excerpt from a book in progress.
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    The book is called "50 Dangerous Things."
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    This is five dangerous things.
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    Thing number one -- play with fire.
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    Learning to control one of the most elemental forces in nature
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    is a pivotal moment in any child's personal history.
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    Whether we remember it or not,
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    it's a -- it's the first time we really get
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    control of one of these mysterious things.
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    These mysteries are only revealed
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    to those who get the opportunity to play with it.
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    So, playing with fire.
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    This is like one of the great things we ever discovered, fire.
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    From playing with it, they learn some basic principles about fire,
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    about intake, about combustion, about exhaust.
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    These are the three working elements of fire
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    that you have to have to have a good controlled fire.
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    And you can think of the open-pit fire as a laboratory.
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    You don't know what they're going to learn from playing with it.
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    You know, let them fool around with it on their own terms and trust me,
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    they're going to learn things
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    that you can't get out of playing with Dora the Explorer toys.
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    Number two -- own a pocketknife.
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    Pocketknives are kind of drifting out of our cultural consciousness,
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    which I think is a terrible thing.
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    (Laughter)
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    Your first -- your first pocketknife is like the first universal tool that you're given.
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    You know, it's a spatula, it's a pry bar,
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    it's a screwdriver and it's a blade.
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    And it's a -- it's a powerful and empowering tool.
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    And in a lot of cultures they give knives --
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    like, as soon as they're toddlers they have knives.
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    These are Inuit children cutting whale blubber.
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    I first saw this in a Canadian Film Board film when I was 10,
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    and it left a lasting impression, to see babies playing with knives.
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    And it shows that kids can develop an extended sense of self
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    through a tool at a very young age.
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    You lay down a couple of very simple rules --
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    always cut away from your body, keep the blade sharp, never force it
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    -- and these are things kids can understand and practice with.
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    And yeah, they're going to cut themselves.
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    I have some terrible scars on my legs from where I stabbed myself.
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    But you know, they're young. They heal fast.
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    (Laughter)
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    Number three -- throw a spear.
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    It turns out that our brains are actually wired for throwing things
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    and, like muscles, if you don't use parts of your brain,
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    they tend to atrophy over time.
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    But when you exercise them,
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    any given muscle adds strength to the whole system
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    and that applies to your brain too.
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    So practicing throwing things has been shown to
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    stimulate the frontal and parietal lobes,
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    which have to do with visual acuity, 3D understanding,
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    and structural problem solving, so it gives a sense --
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    it helps develop their visualization skills and their predictive ability.
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    And throwing is a combination of analytical and physical skill,
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    so it's very good for that kind of whole-body training.
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    These kinds of target-based practice also
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    helps kids develop attention and concentration skills.
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    So those are great.
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    Number four -- deconstruct appliances.
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    There is a world of interesting things inside your dishwasher.
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    Next time you're about to throw out an appliance, don't throw it out.
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    Take it apart with your kid, or send him to my school
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    and we'll take it apart with them.
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    Even if you don't know what the parts are,
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    puzzling out what they might be for
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    is a really good practice for the kids
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    to get sort of the sense that they can take things apart,
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    and no matter how complex they are,
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    they can understand parts of them and that means that eventually,
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    they can understand all of them.
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    It's a sense of knowability, that something is knowable.
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    So these black boxes that we live with and take for granted
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    are actually complex things made by other people
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    and you can understand them.
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    Number five -- two-parter.
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    Break the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
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    (Laughter)
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    There are laws beyond safety regulations
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    that attempt to limit how we can interact with the things
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    that we own -- in this case, digital media.
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    It's a very simple exercise -- buy a song on ITunes, write it to a CD,
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    then rip the CD to an MP3 and play it on your very same computer.
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    You've just broken a law.
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    Technically the RIAA can come and persecute you.
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    It's an important lesson for kids to understand --
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    that some of these laws get broken by accident
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    and that laws have to be interpreted.
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    And it's something we often talk about with the kids
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    when we're fooling around with things and breaking them open
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    and taking them apart and using them for other things --
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    and also when we go out and drive a car.
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    Driving a car is a -- is a really empowering act for a young child,
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    so this is the ultimate.
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    (Laughter)
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    For those of you who aren't comfortable actually breaking the law,
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    you can drive a car with your child.
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    This is -- this is a great stage for a kid.
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    This happens about the same time
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    that they get latched onto things like dinosaurs,
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    these big things in the outside world
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    that they're trying to get a grip on.
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    A car is a similar object, and they can get in a car and drive it.
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    And that's a really, like -- it gives them a handle on a world
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    in a way that they wouldn't -- that they don't often have access to.
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    So -- and it's perfectly legal.
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    Find a big empty lot, make sure there's nothing in it
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    and it's on private property, and let them drive your car.
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    It's very safe actually.
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    And it's fun for the whole family.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, let's see.
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    I think that's it. That's number five and a half. OK.
Title:
5 dangerous things you should let your kids do
Speaker:
Gever Tulley
Description:

Gever Tulley, founder of the Tinkering School, spells out 5 dangerous things you should let your kids do. From TED University 2007.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
09:01

English subtitles

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